The Twilhards (and we say that lovingly because these folks got in line DAYS before the actual Hall H panel) were given Twilight goodie bags with food, cups and this hilarious hyperventilation bag. Gotta love the folks who aren't afraid to make fun of their own fandom.

Star Wars Blu-Ray recreated Tatooine at their booth, complete with a hands-on experience that showed off all the goodies inside the new Blu-Ray pack.

South Park made and gave away real live Cheesy Poofs. Wow.

The SEGA Arcade attached Sonic The Hedgehog rings from their ceiling.

Besides being generally awesome and handing out food to hungry fans waiting for the Doctor Who panel, the BBC also built a real life, actual size Tardis (that was bigger on the inside thanks to some video trickery).

Green Men riding in their own It's Always Sunny pedicab brandishing "that the Picture" signs.

Conan O'Brien hosted a gallery of tons of fabulous Flaming C art. All my love to the person who can send me a picture of "the death of Andy" fake comic book cover.

CBS was handing out these rad Star Trek wallets. However, you'll have to make your own *boop-bwap* sound effect every time you flip it open.

This sign for toymaker Vuduberi was just as adoraterrifying as the many cute yeti and penguin toys and pictures the crafters had for sale at their booth.

The team who created Boilerplate, a graphic novel and series of art pieces about a Victorian robot, proudly proclaimed that JJ Abrams would be making a movie starring their creation. When indie artists make good, we're excited. Especially when they tell you about their success with a hand-lettered cardboard sign.

A light-up Lady Rainicorn puppet wound its delightful way down 5th Street outside the Convention Center, tailed by other characters from Adventure Time. They made everybody smile.

More awesome Adventure Time fans!

This giant picture of Domo, looking cute/scary as he loomed over the comic book publisher's booth, perfectly captured the dark-but-not-serious vibe of the Dark Horse displays on the Comic-Con floor.

Walking Dead didn't just stop there; they also had one spooky elevator ad (channeling the hospital scene from the comic books and TV series).

Cowboys & Aliens sponsored a "gold rush" hunt. Fans hunted down gold bricks filled with goodies like this plastic replica of Daniel Craig's wrist blaster. But more importantly, the blocks also held passes that admitted fans into their big premiere (and after party).

We're not big on Twilight hate, but if you must — at least offer something in exchange. IDW offered a swap. Meyer fans could trade a twilight book for a free copy of Steve Niles and Ben Templesmith's bloody vampire tale 30 Days of Night.